Essentially a sales manager's primary responsibility is to recruit, train and motivate his or her sales force to achieve peak performance. Of these three vitally important tasks, recruiting is the least understood and by far the most challenging.
When you recruit the right person you will find that they're self-motivated and eager to train. On the other hand, if you hire someone that is not suited for the position, you'll experience low morale, high turnover and find yourself constantly in the training mode.
While there's no perfect system that can guarantee you'll hire the right person every time, there are fundamental guidelines you must follow if you expect to recruit your way to the top!
Are You a Buyer or a Seller?
It pays to be patient and selective during the interviewing process.
Obviously, what you're looking for is a hard- working, self-motivated,
team player and not just a warm body to fill the position. By
approaching the interviewing process with a buyer's mentality, you're
more likely to maintain your objectivity and hire a long-term top
producer.
During the initial interview, the vast majority of sales managers
have a tendency to oversell the position. These well-meaning managers
make the fundamental mistake of describing the sales profession in its
most favorable light by over-emphasizing the compensation potential and
understating the inherent challenges.
Buyers understand the importance and the responsibility of being
straightforward and laying all of their cards on the table. They know
through experience that it is better to run the risk of scaring off a
prospective hire than to face a disillusioned salesperson after the
fact. Buyers tell it like it is by emphasizing the demanding aspects of
the sales profession such as rejection and hard work. By placing a few
roadblocks and challenges in front of a prospective hire you are able
to check his or her interest and validate their resolve.
The Process Makes the Difference
You'll never see a bad
resume. Buyers understand the absolute necessity of doing a thorough
reference check. In addition to the standard questions regarding
character and work ethic, it's always a good idea to ask his or her
reference, “In your opinion, if (candidate's name) were to fail as a
salesperson, what do you think the reason would be?” This question is
never anticipated and frequently invites the most insightful
discussion.
I strongly recommend that you use a checklist, because it allows you
to stay on message and helps you to remember important questions.
Relying on your memory is a poor business decision and will normally
come back to haunt you. Take good notes throughout the interview. If
you talk more than you listen during an interview, you're a seller and
not a buyer.
As a manager there are several benchmark questions you need to keep
in mind during the interviewing process. Ask yourself, does the
candidate make a favorable first impression and would you want this
person working for your competition?
You would be fooling yourself not to anticipate that your
prospective hire has been coached and is well prepared for a standard
office interview. With this in mind, I suggest that you conduct two
formal interviews followed by a social interview. The initial interview
is designed primarily to probe for general suitability such as
punctuality, communication skills, financial stability and evidence of
past success. Its been said that both success and failure leave a
trail. Look for past experiences where they have faced difficulties and
have shown the resiliency to bounce back. This approach lends itself to
a valuable discussion about the necessity of being self-motivated and
maintaining a positive attitude in the sales profession.
To allow for reflection, temperament testing and verification of
references, I would advise a minimum of one week between interviews.
Consider setting up some hurdles between the first and second
interviews that will allow you to measure interest and personal
responsibility. When I was a sales manager, I would invite both my
potential hire and his or her spouse out to dinner or to a sporting
event. When you're interviewing a salesperson for a commission-based
position, it's imperative to check for spousal support.
Here are my Favorite Eight Interview Questions:
1. Do you have written goals you want to accomplish and if so, tell
me about them? You are looking for indications of maturity, focus,
planning ability and desire for achievement.
2. How did you earn your first paycheck, how old were you, and what
did you do with the money? With this question you are probing to check
their work ethic.
3. What are the top three leadership traits that you look for in a
manager? With this question you are attempting to gauge their
expectation and ascertain their preferred management style.
4. Have you ever failed at something and if so, why did you fail and
what did you learn from the experience? This question lends itself to a
discussion on resiliency, personal responsibility and tendencies under
pressure.
5. Everyone has strengths and weaknesses as employees. What are your
strong points for this position? This question gives them the
opportunity to tell you what assets they bring to the table and how
they see themselves fitting into your organization.
6. What is the one thing you would improve about yourself? This
question gives you an indication of his or her self- assessment
capability.
7. Other than family members, who has been the greatest influence in your life and why?
8. If you were to fail in this business, what do you think the reason would be?
Temperament Profiling is an Absolute Must
Sales managers who
lack the benefit of temperament understanding are inclined to place too
much emphasize on their gut-level feeling during the hiring process.
Progressive organizations that understand the value of temperament
profiling actively seek people with varied behavioral styles and
thereby benefit from a richness and diversity of perspective. People
with different behavioral patterns are more likely to complement rather
than duplicate each other's strengths and serve in a check and balance
capacity.
Managers frequently ask me which traits are the most important to
look for in a prospective hire? In my opinion, there are two mandatory
qualities any new hire should possess. The first quality I look for is
loyalty. If a person is not loyal to their company, research indicates
that they are more likely to violate company policies and procedures.
Disloyal employees are also the first to leave when the going gets
tough. Look for signs of job stability on the resume and check his or
her attitude regarding previous employers.
The second quality I look for is dependability. It makes absolutely
no sense to invest huge amounts of emotional and financial capital
training someone that you can't depend on.
The most effective people are those who know themselves, know the
demands of the situation, and adapt strategies to meet those demands.
Research indicates that career incompatibility is the major cause of
personnel discontentment and costly turnover. The hidden cost of
excessive personnel replacement is often measured through a decrease in
customer retention.
Simply put, you want to hire a person that has a temperament profile
compatible with the job opportunity. For example, some people are born
analytical and have a temperament style that excels in administration
and attention to detail. Others are more comfortable in a supportive
role and are better suited for a customer service position rather than
the uncertainty of commission sales.
The importance of matching the job description to the correct
temperament style cannot be overstated. Temperament testing is not only
advantageous for hiring and suitability but also as a management aid to
assist in training and supervision after the hiring process. I strongly
recommend that a temperament evaluation be administered between the
first and second interview.
When a temperament evaluation is properly implemented and utilized
in conjunction with other standard hiring and interviewing procedures,
it ensures that applicants are treated fairly without regard to race,
color, age, religion, gender or national origin. If a temperament
evaluation is used as part of a hiring process, it shouldn't constitute
the total basis for hiring or placement. I recommend that an
organization establish and utilize a consistent standard hiring
process. Information gathered in each step of the hiring process should
be reviewed in total prior to making a final hiring decision.
You're Only as Good as Your Pipeline
While some turnover in
your sales force such as retirement, promotion, and transfer is
understandable and can be anticipated; the quitter is often
unpredictable. With this in mind, recruiting must be thought of as a
long-term strategy, not a knee-jerk reaction.
Perhaps the greatest mistake a manager can make is underestimating
his or her turnover. If your personnel turnover is high, it's more than
likely caused by improper recruiting, rather than inadequate training
or a lack of incentives. Even if you're the world's best trainer and
motivator, if you haven't recruited correctly you'll experience high
turnover and may find your sales team bogged down with low morale. If
your recruiting pipeline has dried up, here are four tips that will
assist you in filling it back up with quality salespeople!
• To have an effective recruiting program, it's imperative that your
sales team be enthusiastically involved in the recruiting process. Let
them know that their ability to recruit is considered a vital skill in
leadership development and that their assistance is essential to the
health of the organization.
• Keep your sales team informed by focusing on recruiting as an
agenda item at the weekly meeting. On the agenda show the status of
each recruit, highlighting the salesperson that has recruited them.
• Design and implement an incentive program for your sales force that places an emphasis on recruiting.
• Consider inviting potential new hires out for lunch and cultivate
relationships with clients that you think may be successful on your
sales team. Make certain to include them in your company's social
events when appropriate.
I hope I have inspired you to look at your recruiting program with
fresh eyes and a renewed determination to recruit your way to the top!
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